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Trailblazers in Arts, Politics, Business, and Advocacy Inducted as Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

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Trailblazers in Arts, Politics, Business, and Advocacy Inducted as Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
News

News

Trailblazers in Arts, Politics, Business, and Advocacy Inducted as Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

2025-07-10 09:03 Last Updated At:09:11

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 9, 2025--

Today, during its 57th National Convention, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. proudly announced the induction of eight Honorary Members. These distinguished women represent a broad spectrum of professional endeavors—spanning arts and entertainment, business, education, politics, sports, and advocacy—and embody the highest levels of achievement and impact on both national and global stages.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250709122057/en/

The 2025 Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. include Donna Brazile, Danielle Brooks, Dana Owens (Queen Latifah), Fawn Weaver, Janice Bryant Howroyd, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Swintayla “Swin” Cash, and Toni Townes-Whitley.

Honorary Membership is one of the Sorority’s highest recognitions, reserved for women who are trailblazers in their fields and who have made extraordinary contributions to society. These inductees exemplify the Sorority’s Cardinal Principles of Sisterhood, Scholarship, Service, and Social Action. Their impactful work aligns with the mission and values of Delta’s Five-Point Programmatic Thrust: economic development, educational development, international awareness and involvement, physical and mental health, and political awareness and involvement.

“This year’s class of Honorary Members represents a powerhouse group of barrier-breaking women across politics, entertainment, business, sports, and social impact,” said Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. International President Elsie Cooke-Holmes. “From a trailblazing political strategist to an acclaimed actress and vocalist, a legendary Olympic athlete to a pioneering tech executive, these women embody excellence, service, and the unwavering pursuit of justice and equity. Their collective influence spans boardrooms, stages, and grassroots movements — each one a force in her field and a reflection of Delta’s enduring mission.”

Learn more about this distinguished 2025 Honorary Member Class below:

Donna Brazile

Donna Brazile is a veteran political strategist, New York Times bestselling author, and an Emmy- and Peabody-winning media contributor. She currently serves as a Senior Advisor at Purple Strategies. Brazile made history as the first African American woman to manage a major party presidential campaign, leading Al Gore’s 2000 bid. She has served twice as interim Chair of the Democratic National Committee, and remains active on its Rules and Bylaws Committee.

Brazile is the author of Cooking with Grease and Hacks, co-author of the NAACP Image Award-winning For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Politics, and a contributor to 400 Souls. She is a dedicated educator, having taught at Georgetown and Howard Universities and held fellowships at Harvard’s Institute of Politics. She holds over 10 honorary doctorates and is a recipient of Harvard’s W.E.B. Du Bois Medal.

Danielle Brooks

Danielle Brooks is an Academy Award-nominated actress, celebrated for her powerful portrayal of “Sofia” in The Color Purple, which earned nominations from the Oscars, Golden Globes, SAG, Critics Choice, BAFTA, and NAACP Image Awards. She rose to prominence as “Taystee” in Netflix’s Orange Is the New Black, receiving two NAACP Image Award nominations.

She won the Critics Choice Award and earned an Emmy nomination as Co-Executive Producer for her portrayal of gospel icon Mahalia Jackson in Mahalia. On stage, Brooks earned a Tony nomination for The Color Purple and starred in The Piano Lesson alongside Samuel L. Jackson. Her performance in Much Ado About Nothing at Shakespeare in the Park earned her a Drama League nomination. She also hosted Netflix’s Instant Dream Home, and received a Daytime Emmy nomination.

A Juilliard graduate from South Carolina, Brooks is also a passionate advocate. She co-founded Black Women on Broadway, launched the Annie Edge Scholarship in honor of her godmother, and volunteers with the Atlanta Community Food Bank.

Swintayla “Swin” Cash

Swintayla “Swin” Cash is a Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famer, and Founder & CEO of She’s Got Time, a lifestyle and media company creating the first holistic ecosystem for women in sports. A trailblazer in sports leadership, she most recently served as Senior Vice President of Basketball Operations & Team Development for the New Orleans Pelicans.

One of the most decorated athletes in women’s basketball, Cash is a three-time WNBA champion, four-time All-Star, two-time All-Star MVP, and two-time Olympic gold medalist. She was also named one of the WNBA’s Top 20 Most Influential Players.

Beyond the court, Cash has made her mark in sports media and philanthropy. She founded Cash for Kids, a nonprofit supporting youth through fitness, education, and culture, and has served as an NBA Global Ambassador advocating for social responsibility and civil rights.

Among her many achievements, her most treasured roles are wife to Steve Canal and mother to their two sons, Saint and Syer Cash-Canal.

Janice Bryant Howroyd

Janice Bryant Howroyd, affectionately known as JBH, is the Founder & CEO of the ActOne Group, a multi-billion-dollar global workforce and technology enterprise operating in over 43 countries. As the first African American woman to build and lead a billion-dollar company, she is a trailblazing entrepreneur, educator, and mentor.

Under her leadership, ActOne delivers innovative HR and procurement solutions in more than 52 languages. A North Carolina native and one of 11 children, JBH credits her parents for the values behind her success.

JBH chairs the Women’s Leadership Board at Harvard’s Kennedy School and supports education through major philanthropic gifts, including to her alma mater, North Carolina A&T. A Presidential appointee and global influencer, she’s been honored with the Ellis Island Medal of Honor and named Black Enterprise’s Woman of the Year.

JBH is the best-selling author of Acting Up and The Art of Work, and a sought-after speaker known for her guiding principle: “Never compromise who you are personally to become who you wish to be professionally.”

Jackie Joyner-Kersee

Jackie Joyner-Kersee, hailed as the “Greatest Female Athlete of the 20th Century,” is a six-time Olympic medalist whose 1988 world record in the heptathlon still stands. Dominating track and field for over two decades, she earned titles such as Sports Illustrated’s Female Athlete of the Century and was named one of ESPN’s 50 Greatest Athletes.

A native of East St. Louis, Illinois, Joyner-Kersee attended UCLA on a basketball scholarship, achieving national honors in both basketball and track. Her commitment to education, equity, and opportunity has fueled her work beyond sports.

In 1988, she founded the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Foundation to empower youth and families through education, sports, and leadership. The Foundation’s 41,000-square-foot center in East St. Louis has served thousands. She also co-founded Athletes for Hope to connect athletes with community service.

Her leadership has been recognized with numerous honors, including the FBI Director’s Community Leadership Award and the UCLA Professional Achievement Award. A Goodwill Ambassador for the African Renaissance and Diaspora Network, she remains a powerful voice for equity, education, and empowerment.

Dana “Queen Latifah” Owens

Queen Latifah, born Dana Elaine Owens, is a groundbreaking American rapper, singer, actress, and producer. A trailblazer in entertainment, she has earned a Grammy Award, a Primetime Emmy, a Golden Globe, three Screen Actors Guild Awards, two NAACP Image Awards, and an Academy Award nomination. In 2006, she became the first hip hop artist to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

She rose to fame at age 19 with her debut album All Hail the Queen (1989), which featured the iconic track "Ladies First." Her third album, Black Reign (1993), was the first gold-certified solo album by a female rapper and included the Grammy-winning single "U.N.I.T.Y.”, which was influential in raising awareness of violence against women and the objectification of Black female sexuality.

Latifah starred in the hit sitcom Living Single and earned an Oscar nomination for her role in Chicago (2002). Her film credits include Set It Off, Bringing Down the House, Beauty Shop, Girls Trip, and voice work in the Ice Age series. She received critical acclaim and an Emmy for co-producing and starring in HBO's Bessie (2015).

She also created The Queen Latifah Show and most recently led the CBS drama The Equalizer (2021–2025). A pioneering force across music, film, and television, Queen Latifah continues to redefine what it means to be a multi-hyphenate artist.

Fawn Weaver

Fawn Weaver is a serial entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience and the founder and CEO of Grant Sidney, Inc., where she manages a multimillion-dollar real estate and investment portfolio. A two-time New York Times and USA Today bestselling author, she is also a popular TED speaker and media personality, featured on platforms such as The TODAY Show, Good Morning America, CBS This Morning, CNBC, and in Forbes, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. Her NPR How I Built This episode with Guy Raz gained widespread acclaim, as did her 2024 Forbes Self-Made Women profile.

Weaver is one of only five African American women to found and lead a $1B+ company in U.S. history. She is the founder and CEO of Uncle Nearest, Inc., the fastest-growing American whiskey brand in U.S. history and the best-selling Black American-founded spirit brand of all time. Under her leadership, Uncle Nearest has won over 1,200 awards and was named “World’s Best” Bourbon two years in a row. The 458-acre Nearest Green Distillery is the seventh most visited in the world.

Weaver is a Harvard Business School certified Corporate Director, a summa cum laude graduate of the University of Alabama, and holds an honorary Doctorate of Humanities from Bluefield State University. She also serves on the board of Endeavor Group Holdings (NYSE: EDR).

Toni Townes-Whitley

Toni Townes-Whitley is CEO of SAIC, a $7.4 billion technology and engineering firm with 24,000 employees serving the defense, space, civilian, and intelligence sectors. She became CEO and joined the Board of Directors in October 2023.

A veteran technology executive, Townes-Whitley previously led Microsoft’s $16 billion U.S. regulated industries division, served as President of CGI Federal, and held senior roles at Unisys, where she drove 500% revenue growth in the federal sector.

Townes-Whitley serves on the boards of Nasdaq, the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the Partnership for Public Service, Catalyst, and the Princeton Faith & Work Initiative. She also serves as a guest lecturer at Stanford and Princeton on tech ethics and public-sector innovation.

A Princeton graduate in public policy and economics, Townes-Whitley also holds executive certifications from Wharton, New York University, and the Performance Management Institute. Her accolades include 2024 USA Today Woman of the Year, the Women in Technology Lifetime Achievement Award, and Fortune’s “Most Powerful Women: One to Watch.”

A former Peace Corps volunteer in Gabon and past president of Women in Technology, she is a passionate advocate for women’s leadership, education, and social impact.

ABOUT DELTA SIGMA THETA

Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated was founded on January 13, 1913, on the campus of Howard University to promote academic excellence; to provide scholarships; to provide support to the underserved; educate and stimulate participation in the establishment of positive public policy; and to highlight issues and provide solutions for problems in their communities. Since its founding, more than 350,000 women have joined the organization, making it one of the largest predominantly Black women’s organizations in the country. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated has over 1,000 collegiate and alumnae chapters located in the United States, the Arabian Gulf, the Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada, Germany, Jamaica, Japan, the Republic of Korea, West Africa, the United Kingdom, and the Virgin Islands. The Sorority utilizes its Five-Point Programmatic Thrust of economic development, educational development, international awareness and involvement, physical and mental health, and political awareness and involvement to guide national programs, initiatives, and strategic partnerships. To learn more about Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated, visit www.deltasigmatheta.org.

2025 Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Top row (L–R): Donna Brazile, Danielle Brooks, Dana Owens (Queen Latifah), Fawn Weaver Bottom row (L–R): Janice Bryant Howroyd, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Swintayla “Swin” Cash, Toni Townes-Whitley Announced during the Sorority’s 57th National Convention in Washington, D.C., these eight distinguished women were inducted as Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Representing excellence across arts and entertainment, business, education, politics, sports, and advocacy, each honoree embodies the Sorority’s commitment to sisterhood, scholarship, service, and social action—and reflects the enduring power of Black women leading on the world stage.

2025 Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Top row (L–R): Donna Brazile, Danielle Brooks, Dana Owens (Queen Latifah), Fawn Weaver Bottom row (L–R): Janice Bryant Howroyd, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Swintayla “Swin” Cash, Toni Townes-Whitley Announced during the Sorority’s 57th National Convention in Washington, D.C., these eight distinguished women were inducted as Honorary Members of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Representing excellence across arts and entertainment, business, education, politics, sports, and advocacy, each honoree embodies the Sorority’s commitment to sisterhood, scholarship, service, and social action—and reflects the enduring power of Black women leading on the world stage.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Tarris Reed Jr. sat at his locker Thursday, fielding questions about his run as the interior-scoring, rebound-snagging force in UConn's latest Final Four push.

Yet he wasn't the main attraction.

That's because across the room, an even bigger gaggle of reporters waited for freshman guard Braylon Mullins — the Indiana kid who hit an all-timer of a shot to send the Huskies back to the sport's biggest stage — to return for his own round of interviews.

“Guards are the ones that hit the big shots,” Reed said Thursday when asked about big men getting their due, adding with a grin: “We just do our job, we do the dirty work — and we're used to doing it our whole life so we have fun doing it.”

Maybe so, but there's no minimizing the impact of size this week in Indianapolis. Not with the Final Four boasting its biggest quartet of teams going back roughly two decades, starting with guys such as Reed, Michigan's Aday Mara, Arizona's Koa Peat and Illinois' 7-foot Ivisic twins as anchors to lineups with size radiating all the way out to the perimeter.

The average height of the Final Four teams is nearly 79.1 inches, or roughly 6 feet 6, according to KenPom’s analytics site. That edges last year’s average of nearly 78.3 inches for the biggest of any Final Four going back to the start of KenPom’s data in 2007.

Illinois (28-8) is Division I's tallest team with an average roster height of nearly 6-7 (80 inches), while Arizona (36-2) is seventh at nearly 6-6 (79 inches). Michigan (35-3) and UConn (33-5) are in the top 30 nationally with nearly identical averages slightly behind the Wildcats.

Consider it a sign of the premium each team put on building a roster to overwhelm teams inside, on the glass and with game-altering length spanning the gaps between.

That kind of size, strength and wingspan creates trouble cascading through the matchups. ACC Network analyst Luke Hancock said teams are also thriving by finding power forwards and centers capable of stepping outside to stretch defenses further and create space, eliminating the ability for a defense to simply collapse on a lone big man.

“Guards still win in March,” said Hancock, the most outstanding player of the 2013 Final Four in Louisville’s later-vacated title run. "But I think these guys have become almost like a necessary component. If you want to win championships, you need a big 4 and a monster 5.”

And it's manifesting in several ways as March Madness reaches its final act.

The Illini have had the best defensive tournament efficiency of the Final Four teams while dominating the glass to complete those stops. Their roster includes an influx of European talent, including Tomislav (7-1) and Zvonimir Ivisic (7-2), as well as 6-9 forward David Mirkovic from Montenegro.

The Illini also brings 6-9, 235-pound graduate Ben Humrichous off the bench, while the outlier in the big lineup is 6-2 senior guard Kylan Boswell as a strong backcourt defender.

The South Region champion has allowed .976 points per possession in the NCAA Tournament to lead the remaining four teams. Throw in the fact that Illinois is outrebounding opponents by 16.3 per game, and it's been a perfectly timed boost to an already elite offense with those forwards and centers capable of hitting from behind the arc, too.

"Playing in the summer, you could tell it’s a little bit harder to do some things just because you’ve got Z at the rim, who’s 7-foot-2 and a great shot blocker," 6-6 forward Jake Davis said. “You got Tommy down there. So anybody you’re going up against in practice is super tall. ... We’ve just got a bunch of length everywhere. And you could tell early on that we could cause problems for other teams.”

The Illini will be tested against Reed, a 6-foot-11, 265-pound senior whose scoring (21.8) and rebounding (13.5) averages in the tournament are the best of any player still standing.

That included opening the tournament with a video game-type stat line of 31 points and 27 rebounds against Furman, making him the first player with 30-plus points and 25-plus rebounds in an NCAA Tournament game since Houston’s Elvin Hayes did it twice in 1968.

He’s coming off a 26-point showing in the comeback from 19 down to stun Duke in the Elite Eight.

“He’s a monster,” said UConn senior Alex Karaban, who was part of the Huskies’ 2023 and 2024 title winners. “He’s been so dominant. He’s really playing like the most dominant player in college basketball right now.”

When it comes to the No. 1 seeds, the Wolverines have hummed with 90-plus points in four tournament wins. The Wildcats have been right behind in offensive efficiency despite being shooting fewer 3-pointers than just about every other Division I team all season.

Their meeting Saturday matches strengths.

Michigan has used the 7-3, 255-pound Mara to protect the paint, flanked by a pair of versatile 6-9 forwards in Associated Press first-team All-American Yaxel Lendeborg (240 pounds) and Morez Johnson Jr. (250).

“Our size definitely makes it tougher for smaller guards,” Lendeborg said. “Because we’re so versatile ... we can switch and guard point guards, make their life a little harder. And you know, we’re all strong bodies too. So we try to wear down teams.

“And then, toward the end of the game, that’s when we usually make our runs when we need it.”

Michigan will be tested against the Wildcats with 7-2 center Motiejus Krivas (10.4 points, 8.2 rebounds) and Peat, a 6-8, 235-pound freshman considered a strong NBA prospect.

“If you don't have the big to defend other bigs, you can't compete at this level in my opinion,” Hancock said.

“How do you make it so you're really tough to guard and you have an advantage? It’s the 4-men in this Final Four who are just so talented and the diversity of their skill sets — they can do so many things. That is the ultimate to me.”

AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Arizona forward Koa Peat (10) dunks during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Purdue, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Kelley L Cox)

Arizona forward Koa Peat (10) dunks during the second half in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament against Purdue, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in San Jose, Calif. (AP Photo/Kelley L Cox)

Iowa's Tavion Banks (6) has his shot blocked by Illinois' Zvonimir Ivisic (44) during the first half of an Elite Eight game in the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Iowa's Tavion Banks (6) has his shot blocked by Illinois' Zvonimir Ivisic (44) during the first half of an Elite Eight game in the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

UConn forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) reacts after the team's win against Duke in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

UConn forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) reacts after the team's win against Duke in the Elite Eight of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

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